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What does an executive protection course include?

by Executive Protection Institute EPI was founded in 1978

This is one of the most common questions people have in mind. You need to understand that professional bodyguard is the only industry where its practitioner claims full responsibility of their client’s overall wellbeing and safety. However, there are no specific requirements to enter the field.

However, though it may be easy to enter the executive protection field, it can be quite complex for you to have a successful career as a professional bodyguard if you are not good at what you do. If you want a successful and long-lasting career as a professional bodyguard, we suggest you enroll in a professional personal protection school immediately!

Executive protection training

An executive protection training course can vary in length anywhere from one day to several days. However, most professionals believe that a one-day seminar would not be able to prepare you for the job.

Granted, there are several professionals out there who have no training or former military and law enforcement experience, it is still essential for you to get professional training before entering the field.

What does professional training include?

Professional bodyguard school trains you in two areas: hard skills and soft skills. Soft skills are all skills you need to get the job done 99% of the time. These include advances, formations, etiquette, arrivals and departures, vehicle positioning and placement, etc.

Hard skills include driving, shooting, and unarmed combat. Executive protection training is vital to understanding and learning the job. Hard and specialty skills training must be conducted separately from your protection training since they tend to require much more time and effort.

Soft skills

The best thing about soft skills is that they can be taught in merely a week’s time. Though this week only gives aspiring protectors a glimpse of what the job entails, learning the principles and fundamentals of the job are critical.

Hard skills

For the most part, hard skills like defensive driving is conducted every few years or more. The concept of vehicle dynamics hasn’t changed much in the past 15 years, and one can only ram, reverse, and J-turn out so many times before they take away the toys. 

A professional driving course will allow you to drive beyond the usual limits, practice PIT maneuvers, drive armored vehicles if available, and improve your close-quarter driving skills.

Hard skills training also includes armed and unarmed combat. Unarmed combat training will focus on empty hands' use of improvised weapons and train you to always stay on your toes.

Shooting is also a hard skill that you will learn in a professional executive protection course. Shooting requires a lot of practice and refinement. Executive protection shooting skills tend to be quite different from regular shooting since it requires considering the client before yourself. Single-handed shooting is the primary focus of executive protection shooting since it helps you control and move the principal as required.

As long as you have professional executive protection training under your belt, it is safe to assume you are going to have a successful and long-lasting career as a close protection officer.

 


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About Executive Protection Institute Innovator   EPI was founded in 1978

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Joined APSense since, February 26th, 2019, From New York, United States.

Created on Aug 16th 2022 09:10. Viewed 119 times.

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